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Estimating patient-specific and anatomically correct reference model for craniomaxillofacial deformity via sparse representation

Authors
Wang, LiRen, YiGao, YaozongTang, ZhenChen, Ken-ChungLi, JianfuShen, Steve G. F.Yan, JinLee, Philip K. M.Chow, BenXia, James J.Shen, Dinggang
Issue Date
10월-2015
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
jaw deformity; sparse representation; shape composition; thin-plate spline; treatment planning
Citation
MEDICAL PHYSICS, v.42, no.10, pp.5809 - 5816
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
MEDICAL PHYSICS
Volume
42
Number
10
Start Page
5809
End Page
5816
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/92338
DOI
10.1118/1.4929974
ISSN
0094-2405
Abstract
Purpose: A significant number of patients suffer from craniomaxillofacial (CMF) deformity and require CMF surgery in the United States. The success of CMF surgery depends on not only the surgical techniques but also an accurate surgical planning. However, surgical planning for CMF surgery is challenging due to the absence of a patient-specific reference model. Currently, the outcome of the surgery is often subjective and highly dependent on surgeon's experience. In this paper, the authors present an automatic method to estimate an anatomically correct reference shape of jaws for orthognathic surgery, a common type of CMF surgery. Methods: To estimate a patient-specific jaw reference model, the authors use a data-driven method based on sparse shape composition. Given a dictionary of normal subjects, the authors first use the sparse representation to represent the midface of a patient by the midfaces of the normal subjects in the dictionary. Then, the derived sparse coefficients are used to reconstruct a patient-specific reference jaw shape. Results: The authors have validated the proposed method on both synthetic and real patient data. Experimental results show that the authors' method can effectively reconstruct the normal shape of jaw for patients. Conclusions: The authors have presented a novel method to automatically estimate a patient-specific reference model for the patient suffering from CMF deformity. (C) 2015 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.
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